Abstract
Summary We irrigated 36 species and provenances of mainly Australian native trees with saline drainage water (EC 2 dS/m and boron 2.4 mg/L) in a trial sited at Loxton, in semi-arid south eastern Australia. Twelve months after planting, the survival rates amongst species were similar with a site mean of 96%. Three years after planting, the tallest trees were E. gomphocephala and the provenances/clones of E. occidentalis and E. camaldulensis, with heights ranging from 5.3 to 6.7 m; these trees also had the greatest girth with basal areas (measured at 0.3 m above ground level) ranging from 16 m2/ha to 24 m2/ha. The basal area and height of E. camaldulensis was highly variable ranging from 1 m2/ha and 2.1 m for the CML42 clone, to 16 m2/ha and 6.2 m for the Alcoa clone 20. Provenance also had a significant effect on the values of these parameters in E. occidentalis. In the third year, water use rates were determined for 12 of the better growing species. Over summer, the mean daily water use rates ranged from 49 L/tree for the Alcoa clone 20 of E. camaldulensis, to 12 L/tree for E. kondininensis. The Alcoa clone 20 of E. camaldulensis had the higher daily rate of water use per unit area of sapwood, 4.7 kL/m2. The hourly rates of water use per unit area of sapwood rose with increasing vapour pressure deficit up to a value of about 17 hPa and then remained constant as VPD rose to 55 hPa. Variation amongst tree species in the relationships between hourly rates of water use per unit area of sapwood and VPD was highly significant.
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